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Beyond Unbounded Beliefs: How Preferences and Information Interplay in Social Learning

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Listed:
  • Navin Kartik
  • SangMok Lee
  • Tianhao Liu
  • Daniel Rappoport

Abstract

When does society eventually learn the truth, or take the correct action, via observational learning? In a general model of sequential learning over social networks, we identify a simple condition for learning dubbed excludability. Excludability is a joint property of agents' preferences and their information. We develop two classes of preferences and information that jointly satisfy excludability: (i) for a one-dimensional state, preferences with single-crossing differences and a new informational condition, directionally unbounded beliefs; and (ii) for a multi-dimensional state, intermediate preferences and subexponential location-shift information. These applications exemplify that with multiple states "unbounded beliefs" is not only unnecessary for learning, but incompatible with familiar informational structures like normal information. Unbounded beliefs demands that a single agent can identify the correct action. Excludability, on the other hand, only requires that a single agent must be able to displace any wrong action, even if she cannot take the correct action.

Suggested Citation

  • Navin Kartik & SangMok Lee & Tianhao Liu & Daniel Rappoport, 2021. "Beyond Unbounded Beliefs: How Preferences and Information Interplay in Social Learning," Papers 2103.02754, arXiv.org, revised Apr 2024.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2103.02754
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    Cited by:

    1. Zikai Xu, 2022. "Observational Learning with Competitive Prices," Papers 2202.06425, arXiv.org, revised May 2022.
    2. Navin Kartik & SangMok Lee & Daniel Rappoport, 2022. "Single-Crossing Differences in Convex Environments," Papers 2212.12009, arXiv.org, revised Jun 2023.
    3. Cunha, Douglas & Monte, Daniel, 2023. "Diversity Fosters Learning in Environments with Experimentation and Social Learning," MPRA Paper 117095, University Library of Munich, Germany.
    4. Koren, Moran & Mueller-Frank, Manuel, 2022. "The welfare costs of informationally efficient prices," Games and Economic Behavior, Elsevier, vol. 131(C), pages 186-196.

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